Camellias at a Glance

Native to Asia, the first camellia plants were brought to America in 1797 and grown in New England greenhouses. Over the last 200 years, they have proven to be dependable additions to the southern landscape, where they grow and bloom with minimal care in most inland areas of North and Central Florid...

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Main Author: Sydney Park Brown
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries 2012-04-01
Series:EDIS
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Online Access:https://ojs.test.flvc.org/edis/article/view/119763
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author Sydney Park Brown
author_facet Sydney Park Brown
author_sort Sydney Park Brown
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description Native to Asia, the first camellia plants were brought to America in 1797 and grown in New England greenhouses. Over the last 200 years, they have proven to be dependable additions to the southern landscape, where they grow and bloom with minimal care in most inland areas of North and Central Florida. Camellias are long lived and function well as foundation plantings, screens, accent plants, background groupings, and hedges. Camellias flower in the fall and winter when few other plants are blooming. For the remainder of the year, their glossy, evergreen foliage, interesting forms and textures, relatively slow growth, and low maintenance make camellias excellent landscape plants worthy of more use. This revised 6-page fact sheet was written by Sydney Park Brown, and published by the UF Department of Environmental Horticulture, April 2012.  CIR461/EP002: Camellias at a Glance (ufl.edu) Revisions September 2015, April 2020. Adapted from earlier publication:  Black, Robert. (1985) Camellias in Florida. Circular 461. Revised December 1997. Ingram, DeWayne L. and R. Black (1980). Camellias in Florida. Circular 461. https://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00084319/00001
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spelling doaj-art-405f4d2aafbc48d1949f96ac62d65e002025-02-07T14:11:36ZengThe University of Florida George A. Smathers LibrariesEDIS2576-00092012-04-0120124Camellias at a GlanceSydney Park Brown0University of FloridaNative to Asia, the first camellia plants were brought to America in 1797 and grown in New England greenhouses. Over the last 200 years, they have proven to be dependable additions to the southern landscape, where they grow and bloom with minimal care in most inland areas of North and Central Florida. Camellias are long lived and function well as foundation plantings, screens, accent plants, background groupings, and hedges. Camellias flower in the fall and winter when few other plants are blooming. For the remainder of the year, their glossy, evergreen foliage, interesting forms and textures, relatively slow growth, and low maintenance make camellias excellent landscape plants worthy of more use. This revised 6-page fact sheet was written by Sydney Park Brown, and published by the UF Department of Environmental Horticulture, April 2012.  CIR461/EP002: Camellias at a Glance (ufl.edu) Revisions September 2015, April 2020. Adapted from earlier publication:  Black, Robert. (1985) Camellias in Florida. Circular 461. Revised December 1997. Ingram, DeWayne L. and R. Black (1980). Camellias in Florida. Circular 461. https://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00084319/00001 https://ojs.test.flvc.org/edis/article/view/119763EP002
spellingShingle Sydney Park Brown
Camellias at a Glance
EDIS
EP002
title Camellias at a Glance
title_full Camellias at a Glance
title_fullStr Camellias at a Glance
title_full_unstemmed Camellias at a Glance
title_short Camellias at a Glance
title_sort camellias at a glance
topic EP002
url https://ojs.test.flvc.org/edis/article/view/119763
work_keys_str_mv AT sydneyparkbrown camelliasataglance